This species is common throughout Florida, with the possible exception of the Keys, and it
ranges widely in the eastern half of the United States. It is noticed primarily because of its
defoliation of grapevines in home gardens.

Adult moths are uniformly black except for a yellowish or orange collar. The antennae are
pectinate in both sexes and plumose in the male. The forewings are four times as long as wide
and more than twice the area of the hind wings. The abdomen is usually curled upwards and
expanded at the tip into a fan-shaped, somewhat bilobed caudal tuft. Length of the moth is 8 to
12 mm, while the wing expanse is 22 to 28 mm.

Larvae are yellowish and have black spots or bands. They are slightly more than 1/2 inch long
when mature.

Figure 3. Larvae of the grapeleaf skeletonizer, Harrisina americana (Guérin-Méneville), feeding on a grape leaf. Photograph by Warren Adlerz, University of Florida.

Eggs are lemon yellow, cylindrical-oval or capsule-shaped, slightly over 1/2 mm in length, and
laid in clusters on lower leaf surfaces.

Figure 4. Larvae of the grapeleaf skeletonizer, Harrisina americana (Guérin-Méneville), hatching from an egg cluster on a grape leaf. Photograph by Warren Adlerz, University of Florida.

Similar species in Florida include the zygaenids Acoloithus falsarius Clemens and A. rectarius Dyar. The former is much smaller, the latter slightly smaller than the grapeleaf skeletonizer.
Neither species of Acoloithus has the tuft on the tip of the abdomen. Acoloithus falsarius and
grapeleaf skeletonizer males respond to the same sex pheromone, but at different times of day.
Grapeleaf skeletonizer males are active mostly around dawn and A. falsarius males are more
active in the heat of the afternoon (Landolt and Heath 1987). Acoloithus falsarius larvae also
feed on grape leaves, especially of wild muscadine grapes, as do the larvae of a closely related
species, A. novaricus Barnes & McDunnough (McGiffen and Neunzig 1985). The larvae of the Acoloithus spp. have an off-white or yellow head capsule while skeletonizer larvae have a dark
head capsule.

A common species in Florida most likely to be confused with the grapeleaf skeletonizer is the
ctenuchid Cisseps fulvicollis (Hübner). Cisseps is slightly larger and thicker bodied, but is similar in its blackish coloration and yellowish collar. The hind wings of Cisseps differ are
relatively larger, more triangular, and clear in the middle portion instead of being evenly dark
scaled. Cisseps also lacks the tuft on the apex of the abdomen. The western grapeleaf
skeletonizer, Harrisina brillians Barnes and McDunnough, is very similar to and slightly larger
than H. americana, but has not been taken in Florida according to Kimball (1965). H. brillians ranges from California to Texas and south to Mexico.

Jones (1909) gives the average length of life cycle as 66.7 days and minimum life cycle as 53
days. He lists the average length of egg stage as nearly eight days, larval stage 40 days, pupal
stage 15 days, and length of life of the adult moth as 3.5 days. Kimball (1965) lists moths on the
wing in Florida from March to September. Landolt and Heath (1987) caught moths in
pheromone traps from late March to mid-October in Gainesville, Florida. The earliest Division of
Plant Industry record is February 25 at Homestead, Florida. Winter is passed in the pupal stage.
The senior author has seen egg clusters as early as April 7 at Gainesville. Division of Plant
Industry records show that larvae have been collected from May to November 14. It seems
probable that some larvae appear in April. There are at least two and possibly three (Landolt and
Heath 1987) generations per year in Florida. Adults are diurnal and nocturnal.

Initial symptoms include the appearance of brown, necrotic, skeletonized leaf tissue, resulting
from young larvae eating some but not all layers of the leaf. Later instars devour the leaf,
leaving only a few large veins. Larvae attract attention by feeding in groups, usually side by side
in a row. This is the only pertinent lepidopterous insect that feeds in a gregarious manner upon
grape foliage. As the larvae of the colony become mature they tend to disperse as isolated
individuals or in small groups.

Native hosts include wild grapes and Virginia creeper, Parthenocissus quinquefolia (L.)
Planchon. Among cultivated grapes, grapeleaf skeletonizer seems to prefer exotic or the more
choice and tender varieties. Adults have been collected in Steiner traps several times.

Grapeleaf skeletonizer is a minor pest in Florida. Vineyards receiving regular treatment for
important grape pests are not troubled with skeletonizers. Bacillus thuringiensis can be used to
control skeletonizer and other caterpillar pests. Handpicking in small areas also is an efficient
treatment because of the gregarious feeding habit of the larvae. Caterpillars should be destroyed
as soon as they are noticed on the foliage, as all from each cluster of eggs will be in a single
group, whereas if the treatment is delayed until the larvae have separated into individuals or
small groups, much more labor will be involved. Since the larvae spin their cocoons in the
leaves and trash at the bottom of the vines, clean culture is recommended.

McGiffen KC, Neunzig HH. 1985. A guide to the identification and biology of insects feeding on muscadine and bunch grapes in North Carolina. North Carolina Agricultural Research Service Bulletin 470. 93
pp.

Authors: F.W. Mead, Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services, Division of Plant Industry; and Susan E. Webb, University of Florida
Originally published as DPI Entomology Circular 92. Updated for this publication.
Photographs: Warren Adlerz, University of Florida; and Division of Plant Industry